She's not fully wrong though.. there is a huge issue with our culture and the cartoon idea of masculinity we uphold as the standard in a male. It's rampant in America's patriarchal society but I think it's WORSE in the black community because of how black men are hypermasculinized!

Should it be a shock, though? In slavery, black men were valued for their masculinity by their strength and stamina. This was coveted by slave owners (and possibly secretly their women too) and these same masculine black men reproduced.

This masculinity, though profitable for the plantations, ultimately lead to the further demonization of black men by weaponizing their masculinity. This high standard of masculinity gets adopted into black culture as the norm and of course males live a literally magnified life of patriarchy despite socioeconomic oppression.

I recently listened to an interview by Evanni Solei...she's a black p.orn star. She had some choice words about doing black p.orn; mostly how some of the black male p.orn directors/talents are unprofessional, ghetto acting, and wanting to chill off-set instead of just paying up and going on about their day. She does both black and white p.orn but is more selective with the black p.orn.

I recently listened to an interview by Evanni Solei...she's a black p.orn star. She had some choice words about doing black p.orn; mostly how some of the black male p.orn directors/talents are unprofessional, ghetto acting, and wanting to chill off-set instead of just paying up and going on about their day. She does both black and white p.orn but is more selective with the black p.orn.

23:00 is when she starts talking about black and white p.orn. She mentions it some more throughout but ion feel like looking for it.

She's not fully wrong though.. there is a huge issue with our culture and the cartoon idea of masculinity we uphold as the standard in a male. It's rampant in America's patriarchal society but I think it's WORSE in the black community because of how black men are hypermasculinized!

Should it be a shock, though? In slavery, black men were valued for their masculinity by their strength and stamina. This was coveted by slave owners (and possibly secretly their women too) and these same masculine black men reproduced.

This masculinity, though profitable for the plantations, ultimately lead to the further demonization of black men by weaponizing their masculinity. This high standard of masculinity gets adopted into black culture as the norm and of course males live a literally magnified life of patriarchy despite socioeconomic oppression.

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